Food Styling for Photographers

(Dana P.) #1

PASTA AND SAUCES


Dried herb fl akes can be added to each bag of pasta at
this time allowing the fl akes to be completely random.
After styling the pasta, any herb fl akes in undesirable
places can be removed with tweezers before fi nal photog-
raphy. Fresh herbs should be added immediately before
fi nal photography.

Sauces for Pasta and Vegetable Salads


Th e main object of a pasta sauce in photography is to
add color and interest to the pasta dish. Th e trick is to
achieve the desired look without weighing the dish with
too much color or liquid. Your goal is to make the
viewer automatically think this is a pasta dish with sauce.
(Th ese same techniques also work for potato, pasta, and
other vegetable salads that don’t contain salad greens.)

Th e most common pasta sauces are tomato, pesto, oil, or
cream based. Regardless of the type of sauce, you may
need to manipulate the consistency of the sauce before
applying it to the pasta. Good-quality pasta sauces are
available in grocery or deli markets and are a great time-
saving tool for food styling. However, some sauces are
too thick in consistency to use just as they come out of
their containers.

So the fi rst step with the sauce is to determine if it
needs to be thinned. Pour 1/2 cup of the sauce of
your choice into a work bowl and give it a stir. Notice the

consistency of the sauce. Conduct a test by dropping
one piece of the hero pasta into the dish of sauce.
Roll the pasta in the sauce until it’s covered. Hold the
pasta in your hand and look at it carefully to determine if
the coverage of sauce produces the look you want to
achieve. Keep in mind that after the pasta dish is built, you
will be able to add more sauce to the dish if you desire.

If you decide the sauce needs to be thinned, begin by thin-
ning 1/2 cup of the original sauce. Th e thinning agent you
choose depends on the specifi c sauce you are using. Some
helpful thinning agents are Wilton piping gel, which adds
a translucency and soft sheen to the sauce and will look
good to the camera; half-and-half; or olive oil. Start by
adding 1 tablespoon of thinning agent to the 1/2 cup
sauce. Test the sauce on one piece of pasta as before. If
more thinning agent is necessary, keep track of the amount
needed to reach the preferred consistency. During con-
struction of the hero dish, if more thinned sauce is needed,
use an additional 1/2 cup of the original sauce plus the
same amount of thinning agent. Cover the bowls of pasta
sauce by placing plastic wrap directly on the surface of the
sauce, and mark them to distinguish thinned verses origi-
nal sauce. If you are not shooting on the day you perform
this test, you will have to remember your formula for the
sauce and mix a fresh batch on the day of the shoot. If you
are shooting the day the test is performed, set the bowls
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